Kenyan Fishermen Celebrate Somali Pirates

E-mail Print PDF
Kenyan Fishermen Celebrate Somali PiratesMalindi is a small fishing town on the coast of Kenya. Most of the surrounding villages are mired in poverty. But for the fishermen, life is looking up for they are netting huge catches of fish - earning over 50 times the average daily wage - thanks to the pirates from neighbouring Somalia who have turned out to be their biggest friend

Country: Kenya

JavaScript is disabled!
To display this content, you need a JavaScript capable browser.

Description:   Malindi is a small fishing town on the coast of Kenya. Most of the surrounding villages are mired in poverty. But for the fishermen, life is looking up for they are netting huge catches of fish - earning over 50 times the average daily wage - thanks to the pirates from neighbouring Somalia who have turned out to be their biggest friend

Runtime:  2 minutes 52 seconds

Language: ENGLISH


View (Eng) Script | Download Low Res


Kenyan Fishermen Celebrate Somali Pirates Kenyan Fishermen Celebrate Somali Pirates Order Story

Trackback(0)

TrackBack URI for this entry

Comments (0)


Show/hide comments

Write comment


busy
Last Updated ( Thursday, 04 February 2010 11:23 )  

Video Highlight

You must have Flash Player installed in order to see this player.
Worldcup
Al Jazeera on A24
Quick Glance
Series Programming

Question of the Week

Has President Barack Obama lived up to your expectations as an African?
 
Frontpage Headlines
African Weather

Latest Comments

She will make it!
I pray that all went well! I know that god is watching out f...
15/02/10 21:36
Mone' Ramirez

Punctured Hope
May all that you bring into this world be blessed with grace...
15/02/10 18:19
Cleo

Subscribe

Get the Latest Story
Africa 24 Media

Our Blog: Your Say

Haiti: Africa Shows its Generous Side

However, the destructive earthquake that hit the Caribbean republic of Haiti, the nation' worst ever in 200 years, seems to be changing the general belief that only Western nations, which are more endowed in all economic fronts than their African equivalents, can offer help if a disaster of Haiti's magnitude were to strike any nation.

In the wake of the disaster, African governments and their people are also coming together with the world and have stepped up their gears in the rush to provide international assistance to the quake-ravaged nation, which unfortunately enough also bears the yoke of being the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.